Toward Measuring the Mechanical Stresses Exerted by Branching Embryonic Airway Epithelial Explants in 3D Matrices of Matrigel

Numerous organs in the bodies of animals, including the lung, kidney, and mammary gland, contain ramified networks of epithelial tubes. These structures arise during development via a process known as branching morphogenesis. Previous studies have shown that mechanical forces directly impact this pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Annals of biomedical engineering Vol. 50; no. 9; pp. 1143 - 1157
Main Authors: Patil, Lokesh S., Varner, Victor D.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Cham Springer International Publishing 01-09-2022
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:Numerous organs in the bodies of animals, including the lung, kidney, and mammary gland, contain ramified networks of epithelial tubes. These structures arise during development via a process known as branching morphogenesis. Previous studies have shown that mechanical forces directly impact this process, but the patterns of mechanical stress exerted by branching embryonic epithelia are not well understood. This is, in part, owing to a lack of experimental tools. Traditional traction force microscopy assays rely on the use of compliant hydrogels with well-defined mechanical properties. Isolated embryonic epithelial explants, however, have only been shown to branch in three-dimensional matrices of reconstituted basement membrane protein, or Matrigel, a biomaterial with poorly characterized mechanical behavior, especially in the regime of large deformations. Here, to compute the traction stresses generated by branching epithelial explants, we quantified the finite-deformation constitutive behavior of gels of reconstituted basement membrane protein subjected to multi-axial mechanical loads. We then modified the mesenchyme-free assay for the ex vivo culture of isolated embryonic airway epithelial explants by suspending fluorescent microspheres within the surrounding gel and tracking their motion during culture. Surprisingly, the tracked bead motion was non-zero in regions of the gel far away from the explants, suggestive of passive swelling deformations within the matrix. To compute accurate traction stresses, these swelling deformations must be decomposed from those generated by the branching explants. We thus tracked the motion of beads suspended within cell-free matrices and quantified spatiotemporal patterns of gel swelling. Taken together, these passive swelling data can be combined with the measured mechanical properties of the gel to compute the traction forces exerted by intact embryonic epithelial explants.
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ISSN:0090-6964
1573-9686
DOI:10.1007/s10439-022-02989-y